Tuesday, 31 October 2017

Nicola Slade to my blog today. Thanks for being here, Nicola and I know how busy you are so tell me a bit about your latest book...

NS It's a contemporary romantic novel interspersed with historical interludes so that the reader, though not the protagonist, learns the story of the ancient house and the family. It’s not exactly dual timeline because there are glimpses of several eras, and true to my mystery writing career, murder does raise its ugly head, though only in the historical past – no need for detective work! Here's the blurb...

A hare carved in stone and the scent of flowers in a house full of echoes – can Freya’s inheritance help her to leave the past behind?

Had I gone completely crazy that first day? To open the door, take one astonished look round, and decide on the spot that I would live there?

To fall in love with a house?’

When Freya Gibson inherits an old, run-down property she has no idea she is the last in a long line of redoubtable women, including the Tudor nun who built the house. Unknown to Freya these women, over centuries, fought with whatever weapons came to hand – deception, endurance, even murder – to preserve their home and family.

Freya falls in love with the house but her inheritance includes an enigmatic letter telling her to ‘restore the balance’ of the Lady’s Well. Besides this, the house seems to be haunted by the scent of flowers.

In the past the Lady’s Well was a place of healing and Freya soon feels safe and at home, but she has demons of her own to conquer before she can accept the happiness that beckons.

AW Hmm, that sounds most interesting. And I believe you have brought with you one of your characters. So let's hear what Mary Draper, a secondary but important person who befriends Freya, has to say. Over to you Nicola...

NS Good morning, Mrs Draper. You’ve probably had more to do with Freya than most since she arrived in Hampshire. Do tell us how you come to know her?

MD Call me Mary, dear. Freya’s cousin, Violet Wellman, the one who left her the house, was a friend of mine and when she died her solicitor asked me to keep an eye on the house and maybe drop in to see if Freya was all right.

NS What did you think of her when you first met?

MD She’s lovely, dear, kind, friendly girl, I wish her cousin could have met her. She said she spent some time in America and she looks fragile sometimes, so I expect there was a man at the root of the trouble. Still, she’s been back in the UK for a couple of years now and she’s PA to that Patrick Underwood, who writes those best-sellers. I’m hoping he’ll come down to Hampshire to visit her.

NS Freya’s house is very old, isn’t it?

MD It’s Tudor, dear, with some very unusual features but nobody knows who built it. Mind you, the family were there long before the house; Violet said there were family stories but they’ve been lost over the years.

'A hare carved in stone...'

NS How do you think she’ll settle to life in a market town in Hampshire? And I believe the house is said to be haunted?

MD People say they can smell flowers even when there’s not a petal in the house. So yes, if the scent of invisible flowers means the place is haunted… Still, Ladywell once had a reputation as a place of healing so I think Freya will find it comforting. There’s a few family secrets to uncover before that happens though – and one of them will be shattering but it’s not my secret to tell – though I might give her a hint later. You know, Violet said the house was out of tune and she left Freya a letter telling her to ‘restore the balance’. Heaven knows how she’ll do that!

NS I gather you’re embarking on an adventure of your own soon? Is Freya helping you with that?

MD How do you know that? It’s a secret and yes, I’ll need Freya’s help but I haven’t told her yet. Adventures aren’t just for the young, you know.

NS Thank you for talking to us, Mary. It will be interesting to see how Freya copes with this shattering secret. Can you give us a hint?

MD My friend Violet always said that the house keeps its secrets, some old and some new, but I do know that Violet’s grandmother hinted about royalty in the family – way back in the past!

about the author... While her three children were growing up, Nicola wrote children’s stories and short stories for women’s magazines before her first novel, Scuba Dancing, a romantic comedy, was published. Following this she turned to humorous cosy crime with two series, one Victorian, featuring a young Victorian widow, Charlotte Richmond, and a contemporary series about recently retired headmistress, Harriet Quigley and her sidekick and cousin, the Reverend Sam Hathaway. All her books are set in and around Winchester, in Hampshire, not far from where she lives with her husband.

Tuesday, 24 October 2017

I picked this book up as a result of a recommendation from a friend and I was so glad I did.Set in Mumbai, on Inspector Chopra's last day in the city police force, the story follows the central character through the trials and tribulations of investigating a death. For his boss, the death is inconsequential. For Chopra, it is not that simple and, despite being retired he continues to follow the case and ask questions, some of which get him into difficult spots. What, at first, appears to be a straight forward case becomes complex with multiple twists and turns which reach a thrilling conclusion.The location is colourfully drawn and provides a perfect backdrop for the numerous characters in the story. Chopra, himself, is an upright, considerate and intelligent man and his character glides across the pages, but he knows when and how to be tough if he has to be. His wife, Poppy, is demanding and something of a whirlwind as she pursues her various causes. Both of these characters are very well drawn and it is easy to understand why they work so well together on the page. Chopra's mother-in-law, on the other hand, is a thorn in his side as he is the son-in-law who was not, and still isn't, good enough for her daughter. Within the household the dynamics between these three create some wonderfully comic moments which arise throughout the whole narrative and the wit is deliciously conveyed.As for Chopra's inheritance... well, you will just have to read the book for yourself and, believe me, it is well worth it. There are more in the series and they are equally as good and just as amusing!

Tuesday, 17 October 2017

I am very pleased to be able to tell you that on Sunday
October 29th, from 2pm until 4pm, I have been invited to take part in an event
with two other authors at The Gallery in Slaithwaite. So let me introduce them to you...

Tim Taylor, fellow Crooked Cat author and creator of Zeus of
Ithome, will be talking about the inspiration behind, and reading from, his
latest political thriller, Revolution Day.
Not that long ago, Tim was subjected to my detailed questioning about
his writing as he very kindly agreed to appear on my blog as a guest. You can read the interview here. It will be great to finally meet him in
person and if you want to know more about his book, then checkout Tim's webpage.

Christina Longden, author of Mind Games and Ministers, is a
member of the Holmfirth Writers' Group.
Chris will talking about her writing and reading from her recently
published second book, A Cuckoo in the Chocolate. Chris writes romantic comedies that have a political and
satirical edge. Hmm - sounds
interesting doesn't it? One thing I'm
sure of though, no dratted cuckoo is going to get anywhere near my
chocolate! You can find out more about
Chris on her Facebook
Page.

And then there will be me trying my best to keep up with this auspicious company! I will be
introducing my recently published second novel, Merle, which follows on from
Messandrierre and begins a few months after the end of book 1. featuring my detective, Jacques Forêt, I will be talking a little about
the location and my inspiration for the novels and reading a couple of short
extracts. But I won't be giving away
the solutions to the crimes! You can find out more about Merle here.

It will an enthralling afternoon of politics, intrigue,
crime, comedy and romance. And to
further enhance your enjoyment will be the wonderful surroundings of The
Gallery, run by furniture maker, Wendy Beattie. It is an incredible space!
Check out the website here. Admission to the event is free and there is
a café, so you can enjoy the
readings with a favourite piece of cake and a cuppa.

If you are in the area, please stop by and say hello. The Gallery is on Britannia Road,
Slaithwaite, HD7 5HE - go through the Emporium to the door beyond and you'll
find us.

Tuesday, 10 October 2017

...I'm recently returned from France and there has been a
question that has been circling my mind all the time I've been on the other
side of the channel. Let me explain...

I've always camped from being in my very early twenties. And OK, at twenty and twenty-one, money was
not plentiful so maybe camping was an affordable solution. But the need for a
cheap holiday was not, and still isn't, the real reason I took to camping and
still use campsites. For me it's all
about the location, the view and the opportunity to go just about anywhere, to
stay how long I want and to move on when I decide I've had enough. So, take my pitch at Montbazon. A small bustling town just south of Tours
with a campsite on the banks of the river Indre.

The view from my pitch

On arrival one of the first things I do is take a walk
around the site to see where the sun is, where the best view is, where the
nearest neighbour will be... And I
normally pick a pitch that gives me a great view, that gives me some space
between me and whoever else is parked nearby and that is not near the sanitary
block. Sanitary blocks on campsites
kind of all look pretty much alike - so when you've seen one, you've seen them
all!. At Montbazon, I picked a pitch
that overlooked the river and set my rig so that I could sit in the shade with
only that view in front of me. And, when
I lost the sun in the very late afternoon I wasn't worried that it happened
about ten/fifteen minutes earlier than some of the other spots behind me. Why?
Because for the sake of taking about 15 steps in front of my pitch I
could take my chair, my book or a glass of wine and sit on what I decided to
call Plage d'Anglais.

And the conundrum?
In the two weeks that I was there only two other campers came and parked
in the spots in the area where I was camped.
Everyone else - and there were a significant number of people who came
and went and stayed for a few days - all clustered themselves around the sanitary block. Maybe they were just being practical, I
don't know. Perhaps they thought it would give them an advantange for first in the showers in the morning. Maybe! But after a few days I
noticed another aspect to this, what I considered to be, odd behaviour. They
all set their rigs in exactly the same direction!

My view from Plage d'Anglais

And the camping conundrum?
Why does anyone want to sit facing the bog wall when they can have a view like this...

Answers on a postcard, or in the comments box below, will be very gratefully accepted.

I will be back with more posts from Montbazon, and other interesting places, in the
coming weeks.

Tuesday, 3 October 2017

... Christine Hornsby. Thanks for visiting Chris and, from your many books, which scene would you say you
enjoyed writing the most and why?

Oh, that’s an easy one. About a third of the way into “Man out of Jail” I introduce an Italian Internee. He
had been only a shadowy character before – one described in bias, rumour and
counter rumour. When Ben, my protagonist
eventually meets him they experience an immediate connection.

Being Italian, the prisoner of
war was totally different from anyone Ben had ever seen or known before. In pigeon English and with Gino’s expressive
body language and ebullience they were able to communicate. They seemed to have an immediate
understanding of one another’s predicament. At home in London, Ben had been bullied and
that continued to be so. Gino was always
being castigated by the locals because he was different and a representative of
his country’s allegiance to Germany. They
are both far away from home. When Gino
speaks so warmly of his mother and the village where he was brought up and his
life in Monteregione, it takes Ben back to the Jewish influences in his past
life. They experience a shared nostalgia
and empathy for one another’s current circumstances. Alienated from everything familiar I tried to
describe their unspoken togetherness and understanding. Being young and missing his deceased father,
Ben begins to see Gino as a father figure. Not that he feels isolated or too uneasy as an
evacuee on the farm but even before they met, Ben felt an instinctive
understanding of the prisoner of war. Finally,
of course, there is a shared love of art; in Ben’s case cartoons.

I have presented Gino as a
warm, thoughtful and congenial character so the question begs “Why are the
locals antagonistic towards him?” But
Gino is not simply a character I introduce as a distraction. No, he is pivotal to the plot. In his own way, he effects everyone. His warm character is juxtaposed not only with
an angry, cantankerous farmer but also with the prejudices rained against him
by the locals. Even so, I have given him an unfathomable quality... a mystery
surrounds him and it is a mystery that my feisty gran character and Ben need to
unravel.

I chose my internee to be
Italian rather than German or Japanese for example because I love Italy, its
people and the landscapes. I love their
warmth, their art, their culture but also because I thought such a person would
exude a natural warmth, one that Ben could respond to because he is a sensitive
character coming to terms with his own sense of alienation due to his Jewish
background.

Thanks Chris, most interesting. You can follow Chris on her website and on facebook

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Merle

A 5 star review for Merle. 'I bought Merle and started reading straight away and couldn't put it down. A great little mystery with interesting twists and turns that kept me guessing. Can't wait for book 3.'

Messandrierre

Reviewer Patricia Walker said, 'this is a gripping murder mystery that cannot be put down once you start reading'.